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Film Discussion => News and Theory => Topic started by: MacGuffin on June 10, 2006, 01:06:36 AM

Title: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: MacGuffin on June 10, 2006, 01:06:36 AM
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EW ranks 'Passion' most controversial film

Mel Gibson's "The Passion of the Christ" ranks as the most controversial film of all time, according to Entertainment Weekly.

The magazine ranks the 25 films that have most shocked, disgusted and divided moviegoers, in its June 16 issue, on newsstands Monday.

EW writes that Gibson's grisly depiction of Jesus' betrayal and crucifixion ignited "a culture-war firestorm unrivaled in Hollywood history." Despite — or to some degree, because of — the religious uproar, the 2004 film grossed over $370 million at the U.S box office.

Coming in second is Stanley Kubrick's "A Clockwork Orange." Kubrick's 1971 futuristic film is famous for a violent scene during which "Singin' in the Rain" is played. Reports of copycat crimes led to the movie's withdrawal from distribution in Britain.

Oliver Stone has the unique distinction of landing twice on the list: 1991's "JFK," ranked at No. 5, and 1994's "Natural Born Killers," at No. 8.

"The Da Vinci Code," now in theaters, charts at No. 13 for the debates spawned by its tale of a Catholic cover-up. Another recent film, "United 93," ranks at No. 16 because of concerns that it came too soon after the Sept. 11 terror attacks.

Also among the 25: "Fahrenheit 9/11," "Deep Throat," "The Last Temptation of Christ," "The Deer Hunter," "Basic Instinct," "Do the Right Thing" and "Kids."
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: I Don't Believe in Beatles on June 10, 2006, 01:22:32 AM
The Deer Hunter was controversial?
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: Gold Trumpet on June 10, 2006, 01:26:20 AM
Lists are meaningless, but I think The Passion's #1 is greatly due to the still fresh memory of its controversy. When JFK was originally released, The New Republic ran critical articles on the film for 6 straight issues (outside of even a film review). The Passion of the Christ got only one cover page and cover story. That could say a lot or say very little, but it at least says as much as making a list would to the answer of "the most controversial."
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: Gold Trumpet on June 10, 2006, 01:38:49 AM
Quote from: Ginger on June 10, 2006, 01:22:32 AM
The Deer Hunter was controversial?

Oh, big time. There were a lot of great articles written at the time about the film. The major controversy is that it was one of the first serious anti Vietnam films to be made. Interestingly, it was only one of three anti Vietnam films to be released that year. In 1978 Coming Home and another (I forget the name) were released as well. The Deer Hunter not only rose above the others by winning Best Picture at the Oscars, but its drama was very American for how much it focused on the American ritual of ceremonies. The over extended wedding at the beginning and the hyped reunion of De Niro's return from Vietnam were major parts of the movie. I've never seen Coming Home but this film was duly noted as so American in identity that it was troubling for a lot of people to watch along with the subject.
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: hedwig on June 10, 2006, 01:40:06 AM
i wonder if birth of a nation made it.

if not, consider me shocked and disgusted by that list.  :elitist:
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: pete on June 10, 2006, 02:34:13 AM
if I was compiling that list, I'd definitely throw Enter the Dragon in there in an awkward, contrived fashion, just to remind everyone about Bruce.
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: polkablues on June 10, 2006, 03:00:02 AM
Quote from: The Gold Trumpet on June 10, 2006, 01:38:49 AM
Quote from: Ginger on June 10, 2006, 01:22:32 AM
The Deer Hunter was controversial?

Oh, big time. There were a lot of great articles written at the time about the film. The major controversy is that it was one of the first serious anti Vietnam films to be made.

Also, a few people killed themselves playing Russian Roulette right after it came out.  Much reactionism as a result of that.
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: modage on June 10, 2006, 10:31:49 AM
1. The Passion Of The Christ
2. A Clockwork Orange
3. Fahrenheit 9/11
4. Deep Throat
5. JFK
6. The Last Temptation Of Christ
7. The Birth Of A Nation
8. Natural Born Killers
9. Last Tango In Paris
10. Baby Doll
11. The Message
12. The Deer Hunter
13. The Da Vinci Code <<<(invalidated)
14. The Warriors
15. The Triumph Of The Will
16. United 93
17. Freaks
18. I Am Curious (Yellow)
19. Basic Instinct
20. Cannibal Holocaust
21. Bonnie And Clyde
22. Do The Right Thing
23. Kids
24. Caligula
25. Aladdin
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: pete on June 10, 2006, 10:44:57 AM
what was the controversy behind aladdin?  the subliminal messages?
I'd add star wars: episode 1 and pretty baby.
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: MacGuffin on June 10, 2006, 11:13:11 AM
Quote from: pete on June 10, 2006, 10:44:57 AM
what was the controversy behind aladdin?  the subliminal messages?

Disney's animated Aladdin got off to a rough start in 1992 due to some lyrics that drew the ire of Arab-Americans. Casey Kasem, the long-time DJ and host of American Top 40, led the fight, and by the time the movie was released on home video, the song was changed.

The offending was song "Arabian Nights," which opened the film. The original lyrics were "Where they cut off your ear if they don't like your face. It's barbaric, but hey it's home." The new lyrics are "Where it's flat and immense and the heat is intense, it's barbaric, but hey it's home."
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: squints on June 10, 2006, 02:57:10 PM
it is interesting that Salo is not on that list.
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: edison on June 10, 2006, 07:13:14 PM
or Pink Flamingos
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: squints on June 10, 2006, 07:47:51 PM
fuck this list
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: Split Infinitive on June 10, 2006, 09:39:44 PM
I think a more accurate title for the list would be "The 25 Most Controversial American Movies of All Time."  Granted, not all of them are American productions, but countries like China, Japan, France, England... hell, just about every film-producing country in the world has had at least one huge uproar over a film in its cinematic history.  The Americentrism of a list selling itself as "of all time" is rather staggering by any measure... but then, it's EW.

So, meh.
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: Gamblour. on June 10, 2006, 09:57:54 PM
Quote from: Split Infinitive on June 10, 2006, 09:39:44 PM
I think a more accurate title for the list would be "The 25 Most Controversial American Movies of All Time."  Granted, not all of them are American productions, but countries like China, Japan, France, England... hell, just about every film-producing country in the world has had at least one huge uproar over a film in its cinematic history.  The Americentrism of a list selling itself as "of all time" is rather staggering by any measure... but then, it's EW.

So, meh.

That's what I was gonna say. I did a paper on film censorship, a huge factor in the idea of controversy, and what about a film like "The Miracle"? More important that the mother fucking Da Vincy Code. That's like having Dogma on the list (which is more controversial anywhow).
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: Kal on June 11, 2006, 01:30:49 AM
What a stupid fucking list... those bastards at EW are obviously running out of shit to print.

Aladdin? Give me a break.

Kids was great and it was a fucking indie film. There are so many that are worse...

And United 93 is too new to be on any list.
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: Pubrick on June 11, 2006, 01:44:24 AM
yeah, the only lists worth a damn are the box office ranks.
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: grand theft sparrow on June 11, 2006, 10:15:25 AM
Quote from: modage on June 10, 2006, 10:31:49 AM
14. The Warriors
15. The Triumph Of The Will

So, what Entertainment Weekly is telling us is that the most notorious piece of cinematic propaganda, that also has to do with Nazis, is just less controversial than a cult movie about New York City gangs?  Not only is this list poorly thought out but poorly arranged.

Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: Kal on June 11, 2006, 04:08:49 PM
Quote from: Pubrick on June 11, 2006, 01:44:24 AM
yeah, the only lists worth a damn are the box office ranks.

if you someday expect to make a living making films then you'll see the importance of the list. until then you dont have to worry cause your mom probably buys your dvds.
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: RegularKarate on June 11, 2006, 04:14:49 PM
I'm sure I don't need to point this out, but you're just making yourself seem even more ridiculous.
How old are you?
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: MacGuffin on June 11, 2006, 04:26:14 PM
EW Gets It Horribly Wrong, Again: Tries to List 'Most Controversial Movies' and Fails
Source: Nikki Finke; LA Weekly

The latest issue of Entertainment Weekly (aka the official magazine of office receptionists) takes a stab at listing the 25 most controversial movies of all time. "Every now and then, a film comes along that can genuinely get someone's goat without any studio goosing. Films whose incendiary elements can inspire an offended party to pick up a picket, call for a boycott, even pray for divine intervention. These can be important, progressive, taboo-shattering films--or merely films that feature a lot of randy humping. They can also be films that are truly, objectively despicable." I have real problems with EW's list: it's as if only the post-Star Wars prequel generation came up with it (yet they forgot Brokeback Mountain). I mean, where's Carnal Knowledge? Blackboard Jungle? Easy Rider? Straw Dogs? Apocalypse Now? I Am A Fugitive From A Chain Gang? Dr. Strangelove? Gentlemen's Agreement? Bad Day at Black Rock? Texas Chainsaw Massacre? Midnight Cowboy? Not to mention the original Manchurian Candidate which after the JFK assassination was withdrawn from circulation for 25 years? Or Song of the South, which is still Disney's biggest embarrassment for showing "happy slaves" onscreen. And since they're counting foreign films (Triumph of the Will is included), then where's L'Âge d'Or, for that matter? I could go on and on.
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: Gold Trumpet on June 11, 2006, 04:56:17 PM
I'll credit EW with one thing on the foreign film selection. Its that they included I Am Curious. Arguing what foreign films should be included is arguing among a laundry list. All choices have fine reasons to be on the list but none have definitive reasons. I Am Curious is definitive because it gave America its rating system.

The current rating system puts America in the class of high censorship with countries like China. Large studio films are made to an understanding of what will get by censors and what won't. The ability for violence to be acceptable while sexuality is prohibited makes for uneven reasoning. The world wide effect is that these are the majority of American films being seen across the world are ridiculous for their mis-portrayal of violence.

It was once said an actor could be a star in only one country but never only in America. This is the situation of the rating system as well. What should at least be uniquely American is stretched all around the world because every country is showing mainly American films.
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: polkablues on June 11, 2006, 05:13:13 PM
Let's all take a deep breath and remember that this isn't exactly Sight & Sound we're talking about here; it's Entertainment Weekly.  We should just be impressed they've heard of I Am Curious (Yellow).
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: jigzaw on June 11, 2006, 08:03:16 PM
Yeesh.  Was United 93 really controversial??  Some people didn't want to see it for understandable reasons and some felt it was "too soon", but was there really a controversy?  Were people marching around, or calling for boycotts??  Not that I know of, anyway.

I also agree that it's way too early to call the da Vinci Code one of the top 25 OF ALL TIME, it just came out.
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: Pubrick on June 11, 2006, 11:08:50 PM
Quote from: kal on June 11, 2006, 04:08:49 PM
Quote from: Pubrick on June 11, 2006, 01:44:24 AM
yeah, the only lists worth a damn are the box office ranks.

if you someday expect to make a living making films then you'll see the importance of the list. until then you dont have to worry cause your mom probably buys your dvds.
i was serious. i really believe the box office ranks are the most important, nay, the ONLY important list known to man. i would step over my own mother, god bless her dvd-buying soul, just to be on one.
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: Gamblour. on June 12, 2006, 03:44:36 AM
Quote from: polkablues on June 11, 2006, 05:13:13 PM
Let's all take a deep breath and remember that this isn't exactly Sight & Sound we're talking about here; it's Entertainment Weekly.  We should just be impressed they've heard of I Am Curious (Yellow).

Right, but that inclusion is like, "hey let's ask our buddy who knows a lot about foreign cinema for a good, 'authentic' answer to put in there."
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: pete on June 13, 2006, 05:16:20 PM
Quote from: kal on June 11, 2006, 04:08:49 PM
if you someday expect to make a living making films then you'll see the importance of the list. until then you dont have to worry cause your mom probably buys your dvds.

kal will you please tell us what the two movies you're investing so much movie in about?  tell us about those two movies.
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: Kal on June 13, 2006, 06:29:57 PM
will post about it soon. first one is now finishing principal photography and going into post-producton next week.
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: Reinhold on June 14, 2006, 05:34:52 PM
Quote from: kal on June 13, 2006, 06:29:57 PM
will post about it soon. first one is now finishing principal photography and going into post-producton next week.

the 1-second film doesn't count.
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: Kal on June 14, 2006, 08:04:55 PM
no? oh man... then im screwed

:bravo:
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: MacGuffin on August 23, 2006, 07:45:24 PM
The frighteners
Our critics pick the controversial film 50
Source: The London Times
 
SEX

AI NO CORRIDA (1976) Nagisa Oshima's graphic depiction of sexual obsession was not submitted for British classification until 1989. It was given an 18 certificate in 1991 after optical changes to a scene involving naked children.

BAISE-MOI (2000) The mix of real sex and staged violence for this French "hardcore Thelma and Louise", about a prostitute and her raped friend on a sex and killing spree, provoked shock horror and debate (is it an issue drama or pure exploitation?) wherever it was shown.

CRASH (1996) David Cronenberg's tale of sex addicts aroused by car crashes and injuries, based on a J. G. Ballard story, was banned by Westminster Council before the British censor had even viewed the film for classification.

DEEP THROAT (1972) Porn briefly went overground and achieved dinner-party chic thanks to Linda Lovelace's antics and films such as The Devil in Miss Jones.

THE IDIOTS (1998) Lars von Trier's Dogme satire, about commune members pretending to be physically and mentally handicapped, featured flapping erections and an explicit orgy scene.

I'M NO ANGEL (1933) Religious, civic and industry groups finally coerced Hollywood to expand its self- regulating Hays Code after this ribald Mae West sex comedy. The Code went from prohibiting indecency to mere indelicacy and demanding chaste passion and moral endings. As West remarked of Tinseltown: "Here they tell you what not to do before you do it."

LAST TANGO IN PARIS (1972) Early 1970s cinema began pushing the boundaries of screen sex, led by Marlon Brando's butter-assisted encounter with Maria Schneider and explicit sex talk. The film was banned in Italy for 11 years.

9 SONGS (2004) Michael Winterbottom's film charts a young couple's relationship through their (unsimulated) sexual encounters punctuated by visits to indie-band concerts. Asked Winterbottom at the time: "Why can a writer engage in sexual imagery with no restrictions and yet a film author can't do the same?"

PANDORA'S BOX (1929) Scenes of prostitution, lesbianism and Louise Brooks's sensual performance as a high- class call girl made this film fall foul of censors everywhere.

SEBASTIANE (1976) Derek Jarman's homoerotic movie, shot in Latin, sees St Sebastian going gaily to his martyrdom at a remote Roman outpost. Features the first erect penis approved by the British censor.


DRUGS

CHRISTIANE F. (1981) "At 12 it was angel dust. At 13 it was heroin. Then she took to the streets." Based on the true story of a teenager in 1970s Berlin, Uli Edel's film was described by one critic as "revoltingly offputting".

EASY RIDER (1969) Nicholson, Fonda and Hopper were at it again in the definitive countercultural jamboree, bookending the now-obligatory LSD trip with (real) spliff-smoking sessions and a (fictional) cocaine deal.

HUMAN TRAFFIC (1999) One of the truer films about club culture, evoking the permissive mood of the 1990s, Human Traffic raised eyebrows for its authentic depiction of Ecstasy bonhomie and comedown paranoia.

THE LOST WEEKEND (1945) Billy Wilder claimed that the liquor industry offered Paramount $5 million not to release his searing portrait of an alcoholic, played by Ray Milland. Ironically, temperance groups thought the film would actually encourage drinking.

THE MAN WITH THE GOLDEN ARM (1955) Frank Sinatra excelled as a heroin-addict card-sharp in Otto Preminger's film, which was originally refused a certificate by the MPAA. The following year the production code was changed to allow movies to deal with drugs as well as kidnapping, abortion and prostitution.

PERFORMANCE (1970) On screen, James Fox's gangster was plied with magic mushrooms by Mick Jagger's rock Mephistopheles. Off screen, they allegedly smoked psychotropic DMT. Time's critic called it "the most disgusting, worthless film I have seen since I began reviewing".

REEFER MADNESS (1936) A brush with wacky baccy consigns a pair of innocents to a downward spiral of murder and mental illness in this propanganda piece turned cult classic. Notable more for being cack-handed than for any subversiveness.

REQUIEM FOR A DREAM (2000) Darren Aronofsky's adaptation of Hubert Selby Jr's novel cut a disturbing line in trans- generational addiction, with Jared Leto's descent into heroin Hades being mirrored by his mum's slimming pills habit.

TRAINSPOTTING (1996) The scenes of heroin use — for which the cast prepared with Generation Game style "cooking up" workshops — drew the loudest snorts from Middle England. But Renton and his cohorts also consumed Ecstasy, Valium and, erm, opium suppositories.

THE TRIP (1967) In preparation for this psychedelic wig-out, the LSD virgin Roger Corman took his writer Jack Nicholson and stars Peter Fonda and Dennis Hopper to drop acid in Big Sur. The film was branded a "user's manual" for LSD and was banned in Britain until 2003.


VIOLENCE

BATTLE ROYALE (2000) Kinji Fukasaku's death-sport take on Lord of the Flies also aspired to be a parable on violence and the State — enough to prompt questions in Japan's parliament.

BONNIE AND CLYDE (1967)/ THE WILD BUNCH (1969) Two films that pioneered the art of slow-motion carnage. The final scene in Bonnie and Clyde saw Clyde's head blown apart and was intended to remind audiences of JFK's murder. The Wild Bunch, meanwhile, helped to establish Sam Peckinpah as the "Picasso of violence".

IRRÉVERSIBLE (2002) By dressing up sick shock values as arthouse innovation, the French auteur Gaspar Noé subjected audiences to such treats as a man's head being smashed 22 times by a fire extinguisher, as well as the anal rape of the heroine filmed in a single take lasting nearly ten minutes. Each one feels like an hour.

LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT (1972) Wes Craven's grainy debut stands as the daddy of slasher movies, as two teenage girls are abducted, raped and murdered by psychopaths; then their parents take revenge with chainsaws. Tagline: "To avoid fainting, keep repeating 'It's only a movie . . . ' "
NATURAL BORN KILLERS (1994) Oliver Stone saw his media satire both (initially) banned and take the record for the largest number of cuts and reshots needed to attain an R rating (150). The film's anti-heroes murder approximately 50 people.

NO ORCHIDS FOR MISS BLANDISH (1948) You'd be forgiven for never having heard of this Brit- thriller about the New York underworld. But it had UK critics spluttering hyperbole: "The most sickening exhibition of brutality, perversion, sex and sadism ever to be shown on a cinema screen," was one journal's considered verdict.

STRAW DOGS (1971) It ends with local Cornish thugs being scalded by boiling whisky and having their feet blown off by a shotgun; earlier a cat is hanged in a closet. But it was the rape sequence that saw it banned since, at one point, Susan George's victim appears to become compliant.

THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE (1974) It later transpired that the pain on the faces of the actresses was often real amid the lacerating terror wielded by Leatherface and co. It was allowed an uncut release in the UK only in 2000.

VIDEO NASTIES The rise of the video-rental market in the early-1980s also ushered in the age of the video-nasty: cheapo splatter- movies that had Britain's moral crusaders on the rampage faster than Leatherface in a sorority house. The likes of I Spit on Your Grave, The Driller Killer and The Evil Dead led to the Video Recordings Act of 1984, ending the media frenzy.


RELIGION

DARK HABITS (1983) Made before Pedro Almodóvar achieved global fame, this typically lurid tale in which the Mother Superior is a heroin addict was refused a screening at Cannes. Also see Valerian Borowczyk's Behind Convent Walls, in which a nun gets closer to the Saviour by means of a conveniently shaped object imprinted with Jesus's face.

THE DA VINCI CODE (2006) The biggest controversy centred, in the end, not on the offence to Christians for traducing the faith with specious semi-historical bunkum, but on how Ron Howard could have turned the talents of Tom Hanks, Audrey Tautou, Jean Reno and a budget of $125m into such pedestrian tosh.

THE DEVILS (1971) Was it Vanessa Redgrave's hunchbacked, sexually frustrated Mother Superior, the torture scenes or the indictment of Church corruption in 1634 that caused The Devils to be banned in several countries and released heavily cut under an X certificate in the UK? Whichever, it remains one of the most successful films of Ken Russell's envelope-pushing career.

THE EXORCIST (1973) Its release occasioned fainting in the aisles, one viewer breaking his jaw on the next seat when he fell, and some British councils banned it altogether — a ban made ridiculous by Exorcist bus trips to neighbouring areas. The director, William Friedkin, also caused consternation within the industry for the lengths he went to to scare his actors in order to get realistic performances.

THE LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST (1988) Used to coming under fire for violence, swearing and the negative portrayal of Italian-Americans, Scorsese hit his rawest nerve with this film, in which Christ has sex with Mary Magdalene. Attracted then record complaints (more than 1,500) when shown on Channel 4.

THE LIFE OF BRIAN (1979) It seems extraordinary now, but this finest of all Python films was banned in several countries and ran foul of several local councils in England. So many Christian groups complained that John Cleese used to joke: "We've brought them all together for the first time in 2,000 years!"

THE MAGDALENE SISTERS (2002) Unremittingly bleak tale of three young Irish women committed to work in a laundry run by a sadistic order of nuns, for the crimes of, respectively, flirting, being raped, and having a child out of wedlock. Condemned by the Catholic Church, it was based on a true story.

THE PASSION OF THE CHRIST (2004) The controversy at the time — was the film by Mel Gibson, whose father is a Holocaust- denier, anti-Jewish? — has been eclipsed by Gibson's recent drunken anti-Semitic rantings. The extreme violence also raised eyebrows, though Gibson himself has been obsessed with torture and sacrifice in his films from Mad Max through Braveheart and Lethal Weapon to Payback.

SUBMISSION (2004) After making this ten-minute documentary about the abuse of women under Islam, the director Theo Van Gogh (a direct relative of the artist) was murdered by an irate Muslim. His 2004 film Submission is currently being remade by Steve Buscemi, and he and the leading actress, Sienna Miller, have reportedly been granted high-security protection for fear of reprisals.

VISIONS OF ECSTASY (1989) With most of its 18 minutes taken up with erotic lesbian nun scenes (supposedly of St Teresa and her "psyche") and of passion with Christ, this is the only film to have been successfully banned in Britain on grounds of blasphemy. An appeal to the European Court of Human Rights in 1996 was unsuccessful.


OTHERS

BAD LIEUTENANT (1992) Some films court controversy for glamorising the dark side of modern society. Bad Lieutenant does the opposite. It dives right in to the sleaze and filth, offering, through its nameless central character (Harvey Keitel), a worldview so filth-encrusted that you need a shower after watching it.

BAMBI (1942) Death comes to Disney when Bambi's mother is killed by a hunter, a scene that has traumatised generations of children. The hunter was to have appeared in the film, but Walt Disney, worried about the hunting lobby, cut the role. For the same reason, the film's premiere was moved from Maine to New York.

BIRTH OF A NATION (1915) Depicting the Ku Klux Klan as the saviours of the American south, the film was boycotted by the National Association for the Advancement of Black People, and inspired the re-emergence of the Klan, dormant at the time.

FREAKS (1932) Given free rein after the success of Dracula (1931), Tod Browning produced this twisted tale of love, betrayal and revenge in a circus sideshow, starring real-life "freaks". The film was banned in the UK for 30 years.

JFK (1991) Oliver Stone caused outrage in the press by suggesting that elements within the US government were responsible for the assassination of the 20th century's best loved president.

KIDS (1995) The film follows 24 hours in the lives of a group of hard- drinking, drug-taking inner-city kids, as an HIV-positive teenager sets out to deflower as many virgins as possible.

PEEPING TOM (1960) The film that graces our cover also finished off Michael Powell's career. It is now recognised as a masterpiece. The question it asks of the viewer — if you enjoy a murder-thriller, what makes you so different from the killer? — remains unsettling.

ROMPER STOMPER (1992) This brutal Australian portrayal of skinheads and racial violence features a remarkable performance by the pre-Gladiator Russell Crowe, and was barred from cinemas in Glasgow.

SOUTH PARK THE MOVIE (1999) The proud holder of the record for profanity in an animated film, and with one song containing 24 "f***s" in a minute, South Park is a hilarious satire on censorship, but not recommended for the easily offended. Or Canadians.

THE WILD ONE (1953) This tale of rampaging bikers was banned in the UK until 1968. "What are you rebelling against, Johnny?" asks Mildred (Peggy Maley). "Whaddya got?" replies Johnny (Marlon Brando).

Reader's choice: A Clockwork Orange (1971)

On August 10, in Screen in Times2, we asked you to vote for the most controversial film yet made. Three films came close: The Birth of a Nation, I Spit on Your Grave and The Passion of the Christ. But the clear winner was Kubrick's chilling vision of a violent dystopia, based on the novel by Anthony Burgess.

For 27 years there was no easy way for British film fans to see it. There were sneaky screenings in the Scala cinema in London (it was listed in Time Out as a "fruity mechanical treat"; the cinema was eventually sued and pretty much bankrupt); you could take a trip to a fleapit cinema in Paris or Amsterdam; illegal bootleg copies circulated on dodgy market stalls. Otherwise, it remained off limits until Kubrick's death in 1999.

The film was initially released during a national debate about the effects of violence on the screen, but it was the director himself who withdrew it after reports of crimes copying the gang of "droogs" and their scenes of rape, robbery and violence. Kubrick's widow recently revealed that his decision actually came after he received death threats.

Naturally, the film's absence only swelled its cult reputation, to the point that it has come to obscure the original point of contention: does Kubrick's bleak depiction of ultraviolence flaunt what it purports to condemn?
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: Pubrick on August 24, 2006, 05:56:52 AM
Quote from: MacGuffin on August 23, 2006, 07:45:24 PM
9 SONGS (2004)
Asked Winterbottom at the time: "Why can a writer engage in sexual imagery with no restrictions and yet a film author can't do the same?"
cos when nothing else happens the results are fucking boring. still love ya winty.

Quote from: MacGuffin on August 23, 2006, 07:45:24 PM
THE DA VINCI CODE (2006)
the talents of Tom Hanks, Audrey Tautou, Jean Reno
hahaha, who are they kidding.
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: children with angels on August 24, 2006, 06:13:13 AM
Quote from: Pubrick on August 24, 2006, 05:56:52 AM
Quote from: MacGuffin on August 23, 2006, 07:45:24 PM
9 SONGS (2004)
Asked Winterbottom at the time: "Why can a writer engage in sexual imagery with no restrictions and yet a film author can't do the same?"
cos when nothing else happens the results are fucking boring. still love ya winty

Yeah, and also because character names on a page AREN'T ACTUAL PEOPLE... I've always been in the pro real-sex-in-fiction-films camp, but that reasoning of Winterbottom's is ridiculous.
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: grand theft sparrow on August 24, 2006, 11:09:38 AM
Reading this list is disappointing, not because of the choices so much as because it's kind of sad that you'd have to try to exhibit child snuff or porn in order to get banned these days.  We're so desensitized that you would actually have to kill someone in order to be ban-worthy at this point.  Or talk about Jesus. 

But it's disappointing that we're at that point where the only thing left to ban is the graphic depiction of actual human atrocities.  Not that I'm for censorship but it's kind of romantic to think of going to a theatre to see an illegal screening of A Clockwork Orange.
Title: Re: The Most Controversial Films Of All Time
Post by: pete on August 24, 2006, 12:51:56 PM
I remember one day working at the theater this real self-important pseudo-intellectual lady walked in.  She told me how much she loved indie and foreign movies and her favorite was "9 Songs".  Why?  Because they advertised it like it was a movie from a guy's perspective while it really is a movie about a woman fucking a guy, or something like that.  And that's why Michael Winterbottom is a genius, because he advertised one thing and showed the other.  It broke my heart to yell "Michael Winterbottom didn't market the movie" across the theater lobby.